History of the Middle Temple

The history of the Middle Temple is a long and fascinating one. Templars held the estate of the Temple from the twelfth century until their suppression in the early fourteenth century; thereafter the lawyers came.

Its magnificent Tudor Hall was completed in 1574. By Elizabethan times the Inns of Court were known colloquially as the Third University of England and many persons other than lawyers had become members - among them Sir Walter Raleigh, Elias Ashmole, Edward Hyde (Earl of Clarendon), William Congreve, Henry Fielding, Edmund Burke, William Cowper and William Makepeace Thackeray.

Another Middle Templar and explorer was Bartholomew Gosnold, discoverer of Cape Cod, who named a nearby island Martha's Vineyard in honour of his six-year old daughter. From those beginnings grew the thirteen American colonies and in due course five Middle Templars signed the American Declaration of Independence on 4 July 1776. Moreover, the US Constitution was drafted by a committee chaired by yet another Middle Templar, John Rutledge who, along with six other Middle Templars, was among its 39 original signatories.

The story of the Inn in modern times has seen it become one of the world's pre-eminent centres for legal education and practice.

This History of the Middle Temple written by a team of eminent lawyers and legal historians, is the product of original research in the archives of the Middle Temple, and will be a treasure trove of information about the Inn and its diverse history and influence.